quote from above…. “As a knock-on of this there’s been a large amount ofmedia buzzabout the use of Twitter as a mob-sourced geo-mashup generator to show snowfall. Twitter users have been posting the first half of their postcode, plus the amount of snow in their location. 0 = no snow, 10 = bucket loads. ie: “#uksnow W12 9/10″ Developers have been mashing-up that data. Check out Ben Marsh’s neat, live Google Map mashup of this: #uksnow Tweets“

I really liked flickrSlidr BUT after choosing a great selection of images and creating the slide show ….and trying every which way I could to upload to the blog, I then found it hasissues with wordpress, hayho, so no slide show here

flickrSLiDR allows you to easily embed the classic flickr slideshows on your website or blog. All you need to do is enter the flickr URL address of the user, photo set or group you would like to embed along with some options. You’ll receive the HTML embed code in return.

Mashup –flickriver badges, this uses a flikr photostream and creates a radom selection of thumbnails that changes each time the page reloads. You can like to specific users /groups or sets of photos from that user, or images using the same “tag” or just random images
I like this “mashup” and will use it with students in the Trendhub and maybe on Blackboard

The one below uses a selection from a gobal tag (Hats)
it looks at all images on Flickr tagged with the word Hats

This next selection takes the most recent uploads at random from the

Flickr group “colorfields”“This group has a simple concept: take photos of a frame-filling field of A SINGLE COLOR and post that. It can be textured, have imperfections, etc…but the frame should be filled with one color. They should be abstract enough that the color is clearly the focus, and the most important thing in the photo.”